A significant disruption struck global internet services on Tuesday, November 18, 2025, after Cloudflare — a major web-infrastructure and security firm — confirmed widespread technical issues affecting thousands of websites and applications.
What Happened
Cloudflare reported that the incident originated from an “internal service degradation” that began around 6:40 a.m. ET (11:40 UTC) when it detected elevated error rates in its network.
The company stated that the disruption was preceded by a “spike in unusual traffic” to one of its services, which led some traffic routed via its network to fail.
As of the latest status update, Cloudflare said services were under remediation, but customers might still experience higher-than-normal error rates.
Impact
• Several high-profile platforms — including social media, AI-chatbot, transit and other web services — experienced downtime or limited accessibility.
• Monitoring site Downdetector recorded thousands of user-reports at the outage’s peak, although the exact number of affected users remains unclear.
• Because Cloudflare supports roughly a fifth of all websites worldwide, the incident underscored the systemic risk when key pieces of internet infrastructure falter.
Causes & Context
While the investigation is ongoing, technical observers note:
- The unusual traffic spike may stem from misconfiguration, automated bot activity or an internal routing error — though no definitive cause has been shared.
- Scheduled maintenance activities at several of Cloudflare’s data-centers raised questions about potential overlap with the fault window, though Cloudflare has not confirmed a direct link.
- The event follows a pattern of recent large-scale cloud and DNS infrastructure failures (for example at other major cloud-providers), signalling increased scrutiny of digital-infrastructure resilience.
Consequences & Lessons
- Organizations relying on a single infrastructure provider may face significant risk when that provider is compromised or experiences outages.
- The incident may lead enterprises to rethink redundancy, multi-provider deployment, and enhanced monitoring of infrastructure dependencies.
- From a technical operations standpoint, real-time mitigation (traffic rerouting, fallback DNS/CDN, graceful degradation) becomes crucial in high-availability systems.
Cloudflare is continuing to work through full restoration of services and will publish a detailed post-mortem once the root cause has been isolated.
For businesses, this incident serves as a reminder to:
- Review dependency graphs of infrastructure providers
- Test fail-over and incident-response plans regularly
- Ensure dashboards are in place for real-time anomaly detection of traffic spikes or error-rates